CHERUB
Jr – Spies in Training
WHAT
IS CHERUB?
You’re not allowed to know where CHERUB campus is and
don’t bother searching on any maps, because you’ll never find it.
CHERUB Campus
is so secret that you’re not even allowed to fly over in an aeroplane. But if
you could, you’d see more than a dozen buildings, a forest big enough to get
lost in and lots of neatly trimmed grass. You’d also see tennis courts, football
pitches, an outdoor swimming pool and one of the scariest, muddiest, assault
courses in the world.
If you looked out of the aeroplane with binoculars, you’d
be able to make out some of the children who live on CHERUB campus, riding
their bikes, playing sport and walking along the gravel paths between lessons.
You
might think you were flying over some posh boarding school, although the
uniforms would seem a bit weird.
Cherubs – as the children who live on CHERUB campus
are called - don’t wear blazers and
ties. They wear waterproof boots, combat trousers with lots of pockets for
putting equipment in and coloured T-shirts. It makes them look a bit like
soldiers.
Only very clever children are picked to become cherubs
and they are expected to work extremely hard in school. As well as normal classes
like history, English and maths, cherubs have to do special lessons: karate,
kick boxing, survival skills, espionage, and computer hacking.
These lessons aren’t always as exciting as they sound.
In fact they can be just as difficult and boring as normal lessons. But cherubs
have to learn tons of extra stuff because they’re training to be spies.
WHAT USE ARE KIDS AS SPIES?
The
most important thing for any spy is that the people you’re spying on don’t know
that you are one.
Because no sensible grown up believes that kids work as
spies, cherubs can get away with all kinds of stuff that grown up spies can’t.
WHY ARE ALL THE CHERUBS ORPHANS?
Mums and Dads are very
protective of their children. So are grannies, granddads, aunties, uncles,
foster parents, or whoever else looks after them. They like making sure that
you cross the road safely, they like tucking you into bed at night and always
knowing where you are and what you’re up to.
Mums and Dads would never let their children go off on
dangerous missions and become spies. That’s why every child on CHERUB campus is
an orphan.
And since it’s impossible to be born without having two
parents, it means that every single cherub has a sad story to tell about how
they became an orphan. This book starts with one of those sad stories.
If you don’t like sad stories, you might like to skip
the first two chapters and go straight to chapter three where all the chasing, fighting
and rolling around in mud starts!
(1) THE BIGGEST HOLE IN THE WORLD
Playing in holes is fun. The biggest hole in the world
is in America and it’s called the Grand Canyon. It’s more than a thousand kilometres
long and two kilometres deep, which means that if you fell into the deepest
part, you’d have three and a half minutes to regret putting your foot on that
slippery piece of rock before you finally hit the bottom and went KER-SPLAT.
Lots of people play inside the Grand Canyon. They
climb up the walls, they ride rafts down the river that runs along the base and
some people even jump off the edge in hang gliders and fly down to the bottom.
If you think that flying to the bottom of the world’s
biggest hole with a little glider strapped to your back is too scary, a more
sensible option is to go down in a helicopter.
Lots of people do this and during tourist season dozens
of helicopters swoop in and out of the canyon, keeping close to the edges. Most
passengers get a thrill out of seeing the scenery whiz by, though it has been
known to make some of them a bit queasy.
The pilots who fly into the canyon are very skilful
and helicopters are very safe, so things never go wrong.
Well, almost never…
(2) YOU MUST BE THIS TALL TO FLY!
Five Years Ago
Four year old Zoe King and her three year old brother
Rob were on holiday in Arizona. They spent the night in a motel a few kilometres
from the Grand Canyon.
Before setting off to visit the canyon the next morning,
the two youngsters were taken out into the desert sunshine and made to stand on
the bonnet of their family’s rental car.
Their Mummy, Daddy and older brother Louis stood
alongside them and they got a lady who was walking by to take a photograph so
that the whole family could be in it.
Afterwards, the King family got in their car and set
off for the canyon.
When they arrived, Rob escaped. The toddler clambered
between the metal railings and leaned over the biggest hole in the world before
his mother dragged him away.
‘You’re a very silly
boy, Rob King,’ she said sternly. ‘Stay away from the edge or I’ll make you
wait behind when everyone else rides in the helicopter.’
‘But I want to goooooooooooo in the helicopter,’ Rob whined.
He kicked at the desert sand and made a big fuss as
his mum grabbed his hand and marched him towards the heliport.
By the time the five members of the King family
arrived at the landing pad, Rob’s face was a mess: bright red, with snot and
tears running everywhere.
To make things worse, Rob’s twelve year old brother
Louis wouldn’t let him look through his binoculars and his four year old sister
Zoe was behaving like a perfect little lady and generally showing her brother
up.
But Rob forgot about his tantrum when he saw the
helicopter coming in to land. It was silver. It had an American Indian painted
on the side and it made such a racket that he jammed his fingers into his ears.
The pilot jumped out, dressed in a flight suit, ear
protectors and sunglasses. He opened the back doors while the blades pulsed
just a few centimetres above his head and helped two overweight men to clamber out.
As the men waddled towards the terminal building, the
pilot waved the King family towards his helicopter. But he frowned when they
got close. He leaned inside his craft and pulled out a measuring stick.
He lined it up against Zoe and Rob and shouted terrible
news over the roar of the blades:
‘They’re too short to fly, Mrs King. You have to be taller
than my stick to ride in my helicopter.’
Rob’s
mum looked very upset.
‘But it was so
expensive,’ she said. ‘We booked tickets for the whole family as a special
treat.’
‘It’s
in the terms and conditions, maam. You should have read them. Our safety belts
aren’t designed to hold small children.’
‘What
if my husband and I hold on to one each?’ Mrs King asked.
‘I’m very
sorry, but it’s against regulations. I could lose my licence if I let you do
that.’
Rob was
too little to understand what was going on as a smiling lady came running out
of the terminal building and handed ice creams to him and Zoe.
‘I’ll
make it up to you both,’ Rob’s mum said, as she leaned down and gave her two
youngest children the kind of smile she usually saved for injections and trips
to the dentist. ‘You’ll have to wait inside, but we’ll only be away for twenty
minutes. The lady will look after you and she says they have a play area and a
big box of toys.’
Zoe
looked upset, but Rob was more concerned with tearing the wrapper off his ice
cream, as his parents and older brother climbed inside the helicopter.
‘So
long, suckers!’ twelve-year-old Louis said, giving his little brother and
sister a wave, as the pilot slammed the door of the helicopter and jumped into
his seat.
Zoe looked
upset, but Rob was finding his chocolate covered ice cream a highly
satisfactory alternative to a helicopter ride, especially when he got inside
the big glass terminal building and saw the play area with a giant model
helicopter and a trampoline.
‘Cry
baby bunting,’ Rob sang to his sister, as he raced up the steps of the slide
with his ice cream held aloft in one hand.
As he glided
down on his bum, a flash of orange light tore through the window, followed by
an earthshaking bang.
Everyone started screaming.
When Rob hit the bottom of the slide, he raced outside
behind all the grown ups to see what was going on.
‘Mummy!’
Zoe screamed, holding her hands over her face.
The air
was filled with black smoke and the smell of jet fuel from the exploded
helicopter. Chunks of smouldering metal were scattered all around in the sand.
‘Oh
lord,’ a large man cried as he stared up at the cloudless sky. ‘I just saw a
family get inside that thing.’
‘Mummyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy,’
Zoe screamed again.
Rob
felt very strange. He was too little to understand what had just happened, but the
hot sun was making his ice cream melt all over his fingers so he thought he’d
better concentrate on licking it up.
Rob’s
mum always got cross if he made a big mess with an ice cream.
(3) COMPUTER
HACKING CLASS
Rob King was now eight years old. He lived on CHERUB
campus and was training to be a spy.
He didn’t remember much about his dead mum and dad,
but he could remember the helicopter crash and hadn’t eaten a mouthful of ice
cream since that sad day.
Ice cream seemed like extremely unlucky stuff.
It was
Friday afternoon and Rob was in computer hacking class with seven other kids.
Each kid had a computer on the wooden bench in front of them. Their task was to
unscrew the metal case, remove some of the bits inside, pull out a wire on the
back panel, install a special thingy called a key-logger, then put everything back together again.
And
they were only allowed ten minutes to do it in.
‘Two
minutes left,’ Miss Weller said firmly.
Rob
felt hot and the tension was making his stomach turn somersaults. He’d pulled lots
of stuff out of the computer and fitted the key-logger. But now he had a pile
of bits left over and couldn’t work out where they’d all come from.
Even
worse, three other kids had completed the task and the rest all had the covers
back on their computers and were calmly finishing off.
‘Ninety
seconds remaining.’
Rob
looked helplessly at the loose wires dangling inside the computer and the green
circuit board in his hand. He glanced pleadingly at the dark skinned girl who sat
at the next bench, with her task complete and her arms neatly folded.
Her
name was Lyra. She was also eight years old and she was Rob’s room mate and
best friend – even though she was a girl.
‘Connect
that to the yellow wire,’ Lyra whispered, trying not to move her lips.
But
Miss Weller was the sort of teacher who could hear someone farting three floors
down.
‘Don’t help him, Lyra,’ Miss Weller said
angrily. ‘This is not a team
assignment.’
Rob had
taken Lyra’s hint and fitted the yellow wire to the circuit board. But he still
didn’t have a clue where to fit the board inside the computer.
Even worse, everyone else had now finished. The room
was silent apart from the sound of Rob’s white gloved fingers fumbling helplessly
inside the computer case.
‘Thirty
seconds left, Mr King. You’d better get your skates on.’
As Rob
made a desperate last attempt to force the circuit board into the wrong slot,
it made a sharp crack and snapped in two.
‘Nooo!’
Rob gasped.
His
hopeless task had now become an impossible one. And to make things even worse,
a couple of his classmates sniggered at his misfortune.
‘Time’s
up,’ Miss Weller said airily, taking a final glance at her watch. ‘Everyone who
has finished their task can leave. Have a lovely weekend and don’t forget to read
chapters thirteen and fourteen in time for Tuesday’s lesson.’
All the
kids except Rob and Lyra grabbed their backpacks and filed out of the small
computer hacking workshop.
‘You
can go, Lyra,’ Miss Weller said.
She
shrugged. ‘I’ll wait for Rob. We’re going paintballing together.’
Miss
Weller looked surprised. ‘I thought you were both banned from paintballing.’
‘It was
only a three week ban,’ Lyra said. ‘It ended yesterday.’
Miss
Weller tutted. ‘I’ll tell the medical unit to expect heavy casualties if
they’re letting you two back on the paintball range.’
‘We’re
not that bad, Miss,’ Lyra said, grinning guiltily.
Miss
Weller now stood beside Rob and looked at the tangle of wires inside the metal
case.
‘A
disaster,’ she announced, shaking her head. ‘How old are you Rob?’
‘Eight
miss.’
‘Nearly
eight and a half, isn’t it?’
‘Yes, Miss.’
Miss
Weller shook her head gravely. ‘In less than a year and a half, you’re going to
turn ten and be sent on CHERUB basic training. You’ve lived here for more than
two years already. You’ll be expected to pass first time and qualify as an underage
spy. But that’s not going to happen if you produce sloppy results like this, is
it?’
‘No,
Miss,’ Rob said sheepishly.
‘You’ve
removed circuit boards and wires that you didn’t need to touch and you snapped that
piece by trying to force it into the wrong slot.’
‘Sorry,
Miss.’
Miss
Weller tutted. ‘Will sorry cut it when you’re working as a spy? What if that
computer belonged to a drug dealer or a terrorist? Your life might be in danger
if you messed up their computer. Have you even read the chapters in the
textbook?’
‘Of
course,’ Rob lied, as he shot an evil glance at the battered copy of the CHERUB Guide to Computer Hacking on the
desk in front of him.
‘What
did the chapters tell you to do with the DVD drive?’
‘Unplug
it?’ Rob guessed, as Lyra frantically shook her head.
‘Hah,’ Miss Weller said triumphantly. ‘You
haven’t read it. Those chapters don’t
say anything about the DVD drive. Do you even know what a key-logger is?’
‘Something
to do with, erm … logging keys?’ Rob said weakly.
‘Once
installed, a key-logger records everything typed by the person using the computer.
We can return to the computer a few days later, remove the key-logger and we’ll
know every password and security code that the owner typed in.’
Miss
Weller grabbed the hacking guide off of Rob’s bench and pressed it firmly
against his chest.
‘Study
it properly,’ she said. ‘I’ll be expecting you to repeat this exercise after
class on Tuesday. If you mess up again, I’ll make you run twenty punishment
laps around the athletics track. Is that understood?’
(4) ZOE – THE EVIL SISTER!
Rob and Lyra bolted out of the classroom and slid down
the banisters to the first floor. They flung their heavy backpacks into their bedroom,
making a noise that startled the two guinea pigs who lived in cages on the
window ledge.
‘I’ll
just give Emily and McFlurry some carrots,’ Lyra said.
‘There’s
no time,’ Rob gasped, as he grabbed another backpack that he’d already packed
with a towel and a clean set of clothes to put on after paintballing. ‘We have to get there first and nab some
good equipment.’
Lyra knew
Rob had a point. The CHERUB paintball shooting range had thirty-five sets of
guns and protective gear. If you arrived late, you ended up with one of the tatty
old guns that didn’t shoot straight, a battered helmet and a padded suit that
smelled worse than feet.
‘I’m
faster than you, I’ll catch you up,’ Lyra said, as she grabbed a plastic bag
filled with carrot sticks and began sliding them between the bars of each cage.
Rob ran
out of the bedroom, scrambled down to the ground floor and raced off across the
squelchy football pitches towards the paintball range.
Paintballing was all about running around in a helmet
and padded suit, getting extremely muddy and shooting at your mates with brightly
coloured paint pellets. If there was something in the world more fun than
paintballing, Rob had yet to discover it. And today he was even more excited
than usual, because he’d been banned from paintballing for the past three
weeks.
Getting hit by a paintball doesn’t usually hurt, but
it’s dangerous to shoot someone from close range and Rob had gotten in very serious
trouble for shooting his big sister Zoe from less than the two metre minimum
shooting distance.
Even
though Rob couldn’t run as fast as Lyra, he was still quick and there was some good
kit left when he arrived at the changing hut on the edge of the paintballing
area.
The mud splattered room had three long wooden benches.
A bunch of noisy eight and nine year olds were excitedly changing into
protective gear.
Some had only just arrived and were still peeling off
their boots, while others had already zipped themselves into thickly padded
suits, strapped on protective helmets, pulled down their face visors and slid
on gloves.
Rob happily grabbed the last two really good guns and
rummaged inside a plastic crate until he found overalls for himself and Lyra. All
the overalls were muddy and disgusting, but he’d found a couple that were
slightly less disgusting than some of the others.
‘Thanks, mate,’ a girl growled from behind him.
Rob turned to see the grim faces of his sister Zoe and
her half German best friend, Gerda.
Zoe was only a year older than Rob, but she was much
bigger. She looked more like an eleven year old, with a beefy neck and powerful
shoulders. Gerda wasn’t quite as scary, but was still bigger than Rob.
Rob backed up to the wall and shook his head.
‘This stuff is for me and Lyra,’ he said. ‘I got here
first.’
‘I got here first,’ Zoe squeaked, mocking her
brother’s voice as she gave him a shove and snatched the gun out of his hand.
Gerda quickly grabbed the other gun and the two suits.
‘Danke,’ she growled, using the German word for thank you, but clearly not meaning it.
Rob was upset, but he’d never let it show in front of
his sister. He screwed up his face and tried to sound fierce.
‘I don’t care what guns me and Lyra have got,’ Rob
said. ‘We’ll still wipe the floor with you two.’
‘Oh, I’m sooo
scared of little Robee,’ Zoe giggled, as she gave her brother another shove.
‘You sad little shrimp.’
(5) WHEN I GET HOLD OF THEM…
Ten minutes later, fifteen pairs of cherubs stood
eagerly at the wire gate of the paintball compound, with their visors down and pockets
stuffed with ammunition.
Rob
scowled at Lyra. ‘I’m gonna get my sister so bad,’ he said. ‘I don’t care if
I’ve got a rubbish gun. When the gates open, I’m gonna follow her and…’
But
Lyra shook her head firmly. ‘We’re not
here to go after your sister. We’re here to have fun and win the game.’
‘But
we’ve got to get my sister back,’ Rob
said indignantly. ‘She ripped off our guns.’
‘Zoe
and Gerda are bigger, faster and older than us. If we pick a fight with them
we’ll lose,’ Lyra said sensibly.
Lyra usually
acted a bit more grown up than Rob and he realised that she was right, as usual.
‘Us getting banned from paintball was totally bogus,’
Rob moaned. ‘Zoe shot me from close range before
we shot her, but we were the only ones who got done for it.’
‘Forget Zoe,’ Lyra said. ‘There’s nothing you can do
about her.’
‘Why does Zoe always have to pick on me?’
‘You’re
almost as bad as she is,’ Lyra reminded Rob. ‘You broke her CD player, you
poured water on her school books, you
even put itching powder in her underwear drawer that time.’
Rob
cheered up enormously as he relived one of the happiest moments of his life: ‘Oww,
oww! Miss, my private bits have gone all red!’
The paintball game was being run by a fearsome
looking instructor called Mr Pike. He clapped his giant hands together to get
everyone’s attention.
‘OK you
horrible brats,’ Mr Pike yelled. ‘The rules are simple. You must obey the
safety code at all times. The game lasts for forty minutes. Each team has ten envelopes
and there are ten letterboxes hidden around the paintball compound. Whichever
team posts a letter in the most boxes wins the game. If you get shot three
times by a member of another team, you’re dead. As soon as you’re killed, you
must raise your hands above your head and leave the training compound by the
nearest exit.
‘Today
we also have one extra rule. We’ve had a lot of rain over the past week and
some of the trenches are very muddy and waterlogged. Therefore, all trenches
are out of bounds.’
Mr Pike
raised a whistle to his lips as he opened the gate of the compound. ‘Spread
yourselves out and don’t start shooting until you hear my whistle.’
The
thirty youngsters all cheered as they raced into the compound. Lyra watched to
see which way Zoe and Gerda went before dragging Rob in the opposite direction.
(6) UNDER FIRE
‘It’s so
good to be back playing paintball,’ Rob grinned, as his boots slipped and
squelched across the muddy ground.
It was spitting
with rain. The canopy of dripping leaves over their heads made it dark and
creepy as they jogged past tree trunks splattered with brightly coloured paint
from hundreds of previous battles.
As well
as the trees, the compound had a number of manmade features designed to make paintball
games more exciting: small wooden forts, climbing nets, rusted cars with all
the glass removed and pitch black tunnels full of mud and rats that only the
bravest cherubs dared venture in to.
Lyra
stopped running when she spotted a red plastic box nestled between two trees.
It was lucky to find one of the mailboxes before the exercise had even started.
As Lyra crouched down to post one of the ten letters,
Rob twisted his boot deep into the soggy ground. When Lyra turned around, Rob
flicked his leg forwards and splashed her with mud.
‘Aaarghhh!’ Lyra giggled, as she retaliated by skimming
her boot through a deep puddle.
A great wave of muddy water pelted Rob’s protective
suit.
The mud fight might have turned more serious, but Mr Pike
blew the whistle to start the game. Within a second, Rob and Lyra heard the distinctive
pulse of air from a paintball gun and ducked down as two green pellets whizzed
between their helmets and splattered into the tree trunk behind their heads.
‘Ambush,’ Lyra shouted.
‘That was too
close,’ Rob gasped as he and Lyra ducked down and started running.
More paintballs whooshed through the low branches and soggy
leaves around their heads.
After running twenty metres, they reached a wooden
fence and dived behind it, but not before Rob felt a distinctive stinging
sensation in his bum.
‘I’m hit,’ he yelled, as he looked over his shoulder
at a splat of yellow paint stuck to his trousers.
But there was no time to stand around worrying. Rob
and Lyra both raised their guns into firing positions and peered through slits in
the wooden fence.
‘Can you see them?’ Rob whispered, knowing that his
companion had a knack for spotting tiny movements in the darkest places.
Lyra nodded. ‘See the branches moving between the two
trees over on the left?’
‘I see ‘em.’ Rob nodded.
‘You move around that way,’ Lyra said, pointing
towards a line of shrubs. ‘I’ll blast them out and you can nail them as they
try to escape.’
‘Good thinking,’ Rob nodded, as he crept away.
He crawled through the undergrowth on his belly, to a position
twenty metres away between two prickly bushes. He gave Lyra a wave to signal
that he was ready and eyed his opponents – two friends of his called Mark and Craig.
As Craig crept towards the little red mailbox to post
his letter and score a point, Lyra jammed the muzzle of her paintball gun
between a broken section of fence and began rapid firing.
The first shot hit Craig on the back and Lyra’s blaze
of paintballs forced him and his companion to retreat.
Unfortunately for Craig and Mark, they ran directly
into Rob’s line of fire and he showed no mercy, blasting Craig once and Mark
twice before they made it into the trees.
‘Run and hide, you wimps,’ Rob yelled triumphantly as
the two boys scrambled away.
‘Two hits on each of them,’ Lyra smiled as she walked
towards Rob.
They made a high five with their thickly padded
gloves.
‘Nice shooting,’ Lyra said.
‘This is the greatest game in the world,’ Rob said, as
he grinned from ear to ear.
Lyra spoke
breathlessly, ‘Let’s go find another mailbox.’
(7) HALF AN HOUR LATER…
After thirty minutes of paintball action, Lyra and Rob
were exhausted. Their legs ached, they had sweat pouring out of their hair and
they could hear their hearts banging in their chests. But they didn’t care
because they were having so much fun.
‘Do you
think they’ve gone?’ Rob whispered, as he lay flat on the ground behind a line
of shrubs.
Brown water dribbled down Rob’s visor as he pulled his
face out of the mud and looked up for an enemy that had shot at them a few
moments earlier.
‘Only
one way to be sure,’ Lyra said.
She sat up, half expecting a paintball to come flying
out from behind a tree and explode against her helmet.
But it didn’t.
‘Whoever
they were, it looks like they’ve cleared off,’ Rob said.
The pair stood up and looked around cautiously. They
each had two splats of paint on their suits, meaning they’d be dead if they were
shot one more time.
‘It was
definitely around here somewhere,’ Lyra said as they started walking.
‘Right
there,’ Rob grinned, as he spotted the red mailbox hidden in a bush.
They’d
seen the box before they’d been shot at, but hadn’t been able to post their
letter because they’d come under attack as soon as they got close.
‘Now
we’ve got nine points out of a possible ten,’ Lyra smiled, as Rob slotted the
envelope into the box. ‘Eight or nine points usually wins the game, so we must
be in with a chance.’
‘Seven
minutes to go,’ Rob whispered, glancing at his watch as they scurried up a
small hill. ‘Where do you think that last mailbox is? If we get to it, no one
can beat us. They can only draw at best.’
Lyra
shrugged, ‘We’ve hardly been over the east side, I bet it’s over there.’
‘Oh wow,’ Rob gasped, as he looked over the
top of a hill into a meadow.
Lyra
thought he’d spotted a mailbox, but then saw that it was Zoe and Gerda. Gerda
was leaning against a tree, holding on to her ankle like she’d twisted it or
something. Zoe had her back to them, with a distinctive blob of green paint
across it.
It was perfect. Within a second of seeing his
sister, Rob raised his gun up to eye level and blasted off three well aimed
rounds. Each one splattered into Zoe’s back between her shoulder blades, making
her stumble forwards.
‘You’re
dead, fat head,’ Rob hooted.
Lyra
had shot Gerda in the side, but Gerda dived forwards and managed to crawl away
into the undergrowth, despite clearly having something wrong with her leg.
Zoe
spun around angrily with her gun and almost pulled the trigger. But the rules
of the game said she was dead, which meant she wasn’t allowed to shoot back and
there were surveillance cameras all over the compound to make sure nobody
cheated.
‘Butt
wipe,’ Zoe yelled sourly, as she stood up.
But Rob
and Lyra had allowed their triumph over Zoe to interfere with their concentration
and Gerda had slipped out of sight.
Despite being injured, Gerda managed to scramble up
the hill through the undergrowth and rattled off a shot that hit Lyra in the
thigh.
‘Now I’m
dead,’ Lyra complained, as she scrambled behind a tree and handed the final
envelope to Rob. ‘Take it, try and find the last mailbox.’
Rob
gave Lyra a friendly pat on the back. ‘There’s not much time, but I’ll do my
best.’
(8) ZOE’S REVENGE
As Rob raced off between the trees towards the eastern
side of the compound, Lyra walked downhill towards Zoe and thought she’d try
being nice.
‘Good
game today,’ Lyra smiled.
Zoe
looked Lyra up and down sniffily, trying to decide if she was worth talking to.
‘Wasn’t bad I suppose,’ Zoe said, as she unscrewed the
ammunition clip from her paintball gun.
The two girls headed towards the gate together, eyeing
each other warily while holding their hands in the air to show that they were out
of the game.
‘We posted eight letters,’ Zoe said. ‘I reckon we’re
in with a chance of winning.’
‘We’ve got nine already,’ Lyra said brightly. ‘I don’t
suppose Gerda will get any more with her dodgy leg.’
Zoe didn’t like the idea that she wasn’t going to win
and gave Lyra a mean look.
‘You were out of order, shooting me when Gerda was
injured.’
‘Oh give
over,’ Lyra said acidly. ‘It’s not against any rules and it serves you right
for stealing the guns off Rob in the changing room.’
Zoe bunched her chunky fist in Lyra’s face. ‘Maybe you
should shut that mouth of yours, before I cram this in it.’
‘It’s sad that you and Rob don’t get on,’ Lyra said
thoughtfully. ‘I mean, I know most brothers and sisters have fights, but you
two really hate each other.’
‘Shut your gob,’ Zoe said. ‘It’s none of your
business.’
Lyra didn’t fancy pushing her conversation any
further. Zoe was tough, clever and would probably make a very good spy when she
passed basic training. But she certainly wasn’t a very nice person.
A few seconds later, Zoe proved that she wasn’t very
nice by grabbing Lyra around the neck. She dragged her away from the path and into
a giant boggy puddle.
‘What are you doing?’ Lyra screamed, as Zoe’s beefy
arm crushed her windpipe. ‘Leave me alone. I can’t breathe.’
‘You think you’ve got problems now,’ Zoe sneered, as
she stopped walking at the edge of one of the trenches that had been declared
out of bounds. ‘See how you like it down there.’
Zoe let go of Lyra’s neck and gave her an almighty
shove. Lyra skidded down a slippery embankment, before splashing head-first
into thirty centimetres of runny mud.
The freezing sludge blinded Lyra as it poured inside
her helmet and filled her nostrils. She coughed violently as she sat up, ripped
off her helmet and spat out a mouthful of foul tasting liquid.
‘Ooops,’ Zoe grinned, as she kicked a giant clump of
mud down on to Lyra’s head. ‘Well tootle-pip, I’d better be going.’
‘I’m gonna get you for this,’ Lyra shouted, as the
lump of mud slithered out of her hair and splashed into the water. ‘You wait
and see if I don’t.’
(9) THE
LAST POST
Rob had to locate the final mailbox and post the tenth
letter. He was puffed out, but that didn’t stop him sprinting as fast as he
could towards the eastern side of the compound.
A couple
of shots rang out as he ran. One whizzed by just a few centimetres in front of
his chest, but he didn’t stick around to shoot back, because there were only
three minutes until Mr Pike blew his whistle to end the game.
With less
than two minutes to go, he spotted the last mailbox. It was strung up between
two trees, several metres off the ground. The only way to post the letter was
to climb up a rope net tied beneath it.
Normally,
Rob would have taken a good look around to make sure nobody was hiding out in
the trees, but there wasn’t enough time left to be cautious, so he grabbed the
letter out of his pocket, jumped on to the net and began clambering up.
His
heart thudded as he reached up and pushed the soggy envelope through the metal
flap. As the flap noisily snapped shut, another sound erupted and a splat of
red paint hit Rob in the back. A second splat hit his gloved hand, making him
lose his grip and a third whacked his thigh as he slid down the net.
‘OK, OK,’
Rob grinned. ‘Stop shooting, I’m dead.’
He
didn’t care that he’d been shot. It didn’t hurt and he’d posted the tenth and
final envelope before getting killed, which meant that he and Lyra couldn’t be
anything less than joint winners.
As Rob
grabbed hold of the net to haul himself off the ground, he heard Mr Pike
blowing his whistle to signal the end of the game. Rob flipped up his face
visor as his friends Mark and Craig jumped out of the trees. Their padded suits
were caked in mud.
‘So
we’re wimps are we?’ Craig grinned, giving Rob a friendly shove. ‘At least we
didn’t get killed. How many letters did you post?’
‘All
ten,’ Rob said proudly.
‘Oh,’
Mark said, sounding a little sad. ‘We only got nine. We thought we were in with
a chance of winning.’
‘Never
mind,’ Rob said. ‘You might have won if you’d killed me a second earlier.’
Mark
and Craig both nodded in agreement.
‘We won last Friday though,’ Mark shrugged. ‘You can’t
win ‘em all.’
‘I’d
better run back and tell Lyra. She’ll be well happy when she hears that I
posted the last envelope.’
(10) ZOE’S PUNISHMENT
When Rob arrived back at the noisy changing hut, he stepped
past all the other kids and found Lyra sitting on a bench with tears streaming
down her face. Her hair was caked in mud and she had a big graze down her
cheek.
‘What happened
to you?’ Rob gasped, putting his arm around his best friend’s back as he sat on
the bench beside her.
‘Your
idiot sister happened,’ Lyra said, pointing at Zoe.
Zoe stood at the opposite end of the hut, facing the
wall with her hands on her head.
‘At least Mr Pike caught her doing it on the video
cameras,’ Lyra continued.
‘Doing
what?’ Rob asked.
But Mr Pike
charged into the hut before Lyra could tell him.
‘RIGHT,’
Mr Pike shouted furiously as he slammed the metal door.
He grabbed Zoe by the scruff of her muddy vest, bundled
her into his office and shut the door so that nobody could hear what he was
saying. But Mr Pike shouted so loud that everyone heard anyway.
‘What on earth do you think you’re playing at, young
lady…? Pushing Lyra into a trench is unacceptable and don’t you dare lie to me.
It was not an accident. I saw exactly
what you did and you’re going to be severely punished.’
Rob smiled at the thought of his sister being severely punished, but nothing seemed to
cheer Lyra up.
‘Come on, mate,’ Rob smiled, giving Lyra a squeeze.
‘You’ll be fine once you’ve warmed up in the shower and had some dinner.’
Mr Pike continued to rave at Zoe in the office. ‘You
are banned from all paintball activities for two months. You are going to run
fifty punishment laps over the next week and do you see this?’
Rob looked through the glass in the office door and
saw that Mr Pike was holding up a grubby towel.
‘When all the others have taken their showers, I am
going to give you this rag and make you clean the entire changing room with it,’ Mr Pike yelled. ‘You are going to
scrub every bench, every floor tile and every wall until there is not a speck
of mud to be seen. I don’t care if it takes you an hour, two hours, or even if
it takes you until midnight. That room is going to gleam.’
Mr Pike stormed back out of his office and glowered at
everyone else.
‘I am now in a very
bad mood,’ Mr Pike shouted. ‘Unless you lot want to join Zoe King on cleaning
detail, I suggest that you take your showers quickly and quietly and then head
off to the main building for your dinner.’
Rob noticed a tiny smirk on Lyra’s face as he rubbed
her back.
‘That’s the spirit,’ he said.
Mark and Craig sat on the bench facing towards Rob and
Lyra. They’d already pulled off their muddy boots and started undressing to go
in the shower.
‘Here’s the thing,’ Craig said, as he pushed a fist
inside his boot. ‘None of us likes Zoe, and the muddier it is in here, the
worse her punishment is, right?’
‘So, what are
you getting at?’ Rob asked
‘This,’ Craig said, as he squished the muddy sole of
his boot against the wall and used it to draw a thick brown line.
‘Oh yes!’
Rob giggled. ‘Zoe’s got to clean that up, hasn’t she…? And this,’ he added, as
he scraped his own boot across the front of a radiator.
Lyra
cheered up quite a bit as she swept her hand through her muddy hair and made brown
palm prints on the wall.
There were quite a few kids in the room who’d been
pushed around by Zoe and it wasn’t long before they were all rubbing muddy
clothes along the walls and scraping boots on benches.
By the time everyone had showered, changed into casual
clothes and headed off for dinner, it looked as if Zoe would be lucky if she finished
her punishment by midnight.
(11) MONEY, MONEY, MONEY
Rob and Lyra had eaten a big dinner in the CHERUB dining
room. Now they were lying on their beds feeling stuffed. Rob was concentrating
on a particularly difficult section of his computer hacking textbook, while Lyra
had finished her homework and was flipping through a store catalogue.
‘I want
to get your sister back,’ Lyra said bitterly. ‘She’s always pushing us around.’
Rob
rubbed his eyes as he looked up from his homework. ‘Zoe’s still over there
cleaning up mud,’ Rob smiled. ‘I reckon it’s a fair punishment for what she did.’
‘But we’ve
got to show her that she can’t keep being horrible to us,’ Lyra said. ‘She cut my face and made me cry in front of
everyone.’
‘She’s
bigger and stronger than us,’ Rob said. ‘You said it yourself: if we go after
her, we’ll probably come off worst.’
‘We
will if we just go chasing after her like idiots,’ Lyra smiled. ‘But not if we
plan it all out carefully.’
The
room went quiet for a couple of minutes as the two youngsters concentrated on
their books.
‘Eureka!’
Lyra yelled, as she tore a page out of the catalogue and showed it to Rob. ‘Look
at item C.’
Rob
looked at a picture of the biggest, meanest, water cannon he’d ever seen,
before reading the description written beneath it:
Item C. Drenchmaster 5000, air powered soaking gun.
Holds two litres of
water. Exclusive air pump system squirts water up to forty metres. Quite simply
the most powerful water gun available. NOTE: This item is unsuitable for
children aged twelve and under. Price £16.99. Catalogue number 261 272
Lyra
tapped on a banner at the top of the page that said, Special offer, buy one get one free.
‘Imagine
if we sneaked up behind her with two of those Drenchmasters and… BLAMMO!’
Rob rolled back on his bed and cracked up
laughing. ‘That’s a cool idea.’
‘Do you
know when the best time to get Zoe and Gerda is?’ Lyra asked.
‘When?’
‘They always put on ear rings and fancy clothes when they
out shopping. They walk around the mall pretending they’re all sophisticated,
like teenagers or something.’
‘I’m up
for that,’ Rob giggled. ‘I’d even pay some money towards the water guns if I
had any.’
Lyra’s
face dropped. ‘I thought you had thirty quid. You were saving up to get the
hard drive for your Playstation.’
Rob
shrugged. ‘I was, but I bought that Arsenal shirt instead, remember?’
‘Bums,’
Lyra moaned. ‘I was hoping you’d lend me some of your savings to pay for them.’
‘Sorry,’
Rob said. ‘All I’ve got is three quid. Haven’t you got any money at all?’
‘Fifty-three
pence and a one Euro coin left over from our trip to France.’
‘I
guess that plan’s out of the window then,’ Rob said, shaking his head.
‘Christmas is months away, our birthdays are even further…’
‘Maybe
someone will lend us the money,’ Lyra said. ‘You could ask Mark or Craig and I
could mention it to some of the girls.’
‘Doubt
it,’ Rob shrugged. ‘Maybe they’d lend us if we were just a few quid short, but
nobody will lend us the whole sixteen ninety-nine.’
‘We
could ask our carer for an advance on our pocket money,’ Lyra said.
Rob burst
out laughing, ‘You’re dreaming. You’d have better luck trying to rob the bank
of England than getting extra money out of Mad Madeline.’
Lyra growled
and pounded her fist into Rob’s mattress. ‘I’ve got to get my hands on enough money to buy a pair of Drenchmasters.’
A
thought popped into Rob’s head as he looked at the toys and games scattered
around the room.
‘Why
don’t we try selling some of our stuff?’ he asked brightly.
(12) EVERYTHING MUST GO!
Rob and Lyra crawled around the floor looking for things
they didn’t play with anymore. They ended up with a backpack stuffed with an
odd assortment of Playstation games, action figures, Lego sets, a couple of
DVDs and even a giant pink bunny called Mel that Lyra had slept with every
night until she was six years old.
They
headed out into the corridor and began knocking on the doors of the other kids
in the junior block, carefully avoiding rooms where older girls who were
friends with Zoe lived.
Rob
sold a Tonka truck and a big stack of trading cards to a little five year old
called Martin. Lyra sold a couple of hits CDs and a Playstation game, but when
they ran out of doors to knock on, they were still short of their £16.99 target.
‘How
much have we got?’ Rob asked Lyra, as they turned back into their room.
‘Six
pounds sixty-four,’ Lyra said miserably. ‘Even with the pocket money we had to
start with, we’re still seven pounds short.’
Craig
stuck his head through the doorway. ‘Did you sell much?’ he asked.
‘Not
enough to get the Drenchmasters,’ Rob said, as he stared miserably down at his
socks,
‘Shame,’
Craig said. ‘I’ll take those two Playstation games if you want, but I can’t pay
you until pocket money day.’
‘No
way,’ Lyra said. ‘Everyone will have
money on pocket money day, but we want to go to the shops tomorrow.’
‘Oh
well,’ Craig said, looking at his watch. ‘It’s nine o’clock. I’d better start
getting ready for bed, or Madeline’s gonna do her nut.’
‘Is
that the time?’ Rob gasped, as he glanced around at his clock radio. ‘I thought
it was earlier.’
‘See
yous tomorrow,’ Craig waved, but as he headed out into the corridor he had a
brainwave and turned back. ‘Here, you know who might be able to help you?’
‘Who?’
Rob asked excitedly.
‘Kyle
Blueman,’ Craig said.
Kyle
was a sixteen-year-old cherub who lived in the main building. Everyone on
campus knew him because he was always trying to earn money by making and
selling pirate copies of movies and video games.
‘How
can Kyle help us?’ Lyra asked.
‘He
gets kids to run errands and do jobs for him,’ Craig explained. ‘Jake Parker
made over two-hundred pounds copying DVDs for Kyle and Wendy made a mint
selling photocopied Harry Potter books.’
‘And
you think he’ll give us a job if we go over and see him?’ Rob asked.
Craig
shrugged, ‘It’s just a thought. But if you want to see Kyle tonight, you’d
better hurry up. Madeline will be locking up any minute now.’
Rob and
Lyra looked uncertainly at each other.
‘What
do you reckon?’ Lyra asked.
‘It’s
our only chance of getting our hands on the money in time to go shopping
tomorrow,’ Rob said. ‘We might as well give it a try.’
As
Craig stepped back to his room, Rob and Lyra belted out into the corridor and
started running downstairs to the ground floor. Unfortunately, their carer, a
chubby woman called Madeline Darko, had beaten them to the door.
‘And
where exactly do you two think you’re
going at this time of night?’ Madeline asked, as she turned a key in the lock.
‘Miss,
we just have to pop across to the main building to see someone,’ Lyra said.
‘I left
my comic over there at dinner time,’ Rob added.
‘Did
you really?’ Madeline said as she
tapped on the face of her watch, clearly not believing either excuse. ‘It’s two
minutes to nine and I can assure you, you’re not going anywhere except upstairs to the washroom to brush your
teeth and then back to your rooms to put your PJs on.’
‘But…’
Lyra said.
‘No ifs,
no buts,’ Madeline said firmly. ‘If you two aren’t in bed in ten minutes flat,
I’m going to want to know why. Now move
it.’
(13) THE DARKNESS
Rob and Lyra cleaned their teeth, put out the light
and climbed into bed. Madeline stuck her head inside their room to make sure
they were both behaving, but their heads popped up as soon as she shut the
door.
Lyra
flicked on her torch and pointed it at Rob. ‘Are you ready?’
‘Ready,’
Rob nodded, as he swung out of bed.
He
pulled jeans and a hoodie over his pyjamas, before sliding his feet into his
trainers and heading for the door.
‘Quietly,’
Lyra cautioned, as Rob grabbed the door handle.
Rob poked
his head out into the corridor and looked both ways to make sure that Madeline
wasn’t around.
‘Looks OK,’
Rob said, as he crept into the corridor and moved quickly towards the swinging
doors that led on to the stairs.
The
exit door was locked, so they headed down an unlit corridor that had classrooms
on either side, turning the knob on each door as they went. The first three
doors were locked, but – much to Rob and Lyra’s relief - the fourth one swung
open into a maths classroom with graphs and counting charts on the wall.
Lyra
placed a chair by the window, then stood on it and reached up to unscrew the
catch that locked the window. While she pushed the chair out of the way, Rob opened
the window and swung his leg out over the ledge. He slid his bum off and his
trainers crashed noisily on to the gravel path that surrounded the building.
‘Sssssssssh,’
Lyra said anxiously.
But
there’s no quiet way to jump on to gravel and Lyra made as much noise as Rob
had done. They both looked around anxiously, but there was no sign of Madeline coming
after them.
CHERUB
campus is big and it was over a kilometre from the Junior Block, where Rob and
Lyra lived, to the main building where all the older cherubs who were qualified
to work as spies lived.
As they crept around the side of the junior block, Rob
and Lyra eyed two electric golf carts standing under a canopy. The carts were
used by teachers and other staff to move quickly around campus. Children were
only allowed to use them with permission and they’d only get it if they had
something heavy to carry, or if they were looking after another kid with a serious
injury like a broken leg.
‘Let’s drive,’ Rob grinned.
‘Are you mad? Lyra said, shaking her head, ‘We’ll be
made to run about a million punishment laps if we’re caught driving a cart
without permission.’
Rob shrugged, ‘But we’ll get to the main building and
back so much quicker, which means there’s less chance of getting caught.’
‘Well I suppose,’ Lyra said. ‘Bagsy I’m driving.’
Rob wasn’t too happy about Lyra driving, but she raced
off and was in the driving seat before he got a chance to complain.
‘Bags I’m driving back,’ Rob said, as Lyra flipped on
the headlamps and squeezed the accelerator pedal.
(14) KYLE BLUEMAN
Rob and Lyra parked the electric buggy at the rear of
the eight storey main building. There was a permanently staffed reception desk
in the front entrance, so they had to sneak through the fire doors at the back
and walk upstairs to Kyle’s room on the sixth floor.
They
felt nervous as they moved along the corridor. There would be big trouble if
any of the staff caught them out of bed.
The older cherubs lived in the single rooms that
branched off both sides. Most of the doors were open because there was a party
going on. Loud music thumped out of several stereos and teenagers lined the walls
holding cans of Coke and paper plates, while a banner had been hung from the
ceiling saying, Happy Birthday Gabrielle!
Kyle
lived in room 616, but when Rob and Lyra reached the door, they discovered a blonde
haired boy called James leaning against it snogging his girlfriend.
‘What
are you two squirts doing up here?’ James asked. ‘Shouldn’t you be in bed?’
‘We’re
looking for Kyle,’ Rob explained.
James
tutted, before knocking on the door. ‘Kyle, I’ve got a couple of little
customers for you out here,’ he said.
‘Just a
minute, James,’ Kyle answered from inside.
As Rob
and Lyra waited anxiously for the door to open, three girls charged out of a
room across the hall and began fighting with pillows.
‘Sorry,
little dude,’ one of them shrieked, as a pillow skimmed over Rob’s head.
The
whole scene of older kids partying, snogging and chasing around made Rob and
Lyra uncomfortable. When Kyle opened his door, they barged inside without
waiting for an invitation.
‘Come
in, why don’t you?’ Kyle smirked as he pushed up the door. The slender teenager
was dressed in baggy jeans and seemed younger than sixteen.
Rob
looked all around and marvelled at the neatness. Everything in Kyle’s room was tidy,
from the stacks of magazines on the bedside table to the polished boots lined
up on a rack near the door.
‘If
you’ve come looking for DVDs, I’ve got them all,’ Kyle said, as he knelt on his
carpet and slid an aluminium case out from beneath his bed. ‘Three pounds for movies,
five for Playstation games, two for music CDs.’
‘Are
they pirate copies?’ Rob asked, as Kyle flipped open the box, revealing almost
a thousand silver discs.
‘Of
course,’ Kyle grinned. ‘You can’t get real ones at those prices, but they’re
all tested and guaranteed to work.’
‘Where
are the games?’ Rob asked, as he knelt down excitedly and started flipping
through the disks.
‘AHEM,’
Lyra said, noisily clearing her throat. ‘We didn’t come here to spend money.’
Kyle
looked surprised as he stood up. ‘Well what did you come here for?’
‘We
were hoping you could help us to earn some money,’ Lyra explained.
‘And
how am I supposed to do that?’ Kyle asked.
Visiting
Kyle had seemed like a good idea when Craig suggested it, but now Lyra felt
stupid.
‘Someone
told us you give kids jobs to do,’ Lyra explained. ‘Selling stuff and that.’
‘Jake
Parker said you paid him nearly two hundred pounds for copying some DVDs,’ Rob
blurted.
Kyle
suddenly sounded annoyed. ‘Jake Parker is a big mouth who nearly got me kicked
out of CHERUB. No offence, but I don’t trust little kids to work for me anymore
and even if I did, I wouldn’t pick you two. I hardly know you.’
‘Can I
buy this?’ Rob asked, as he slid a Playstation game out of the case.
‘Sure,’
Kyle said. ‘Five quid.’
‘No you
can’t,’ Lyra said angrily. ‘We’re saving up for the Drenchmasters.’
‘You
might as well give up,’ Rob said. ‘We’re never going to get the money and this
game is a total bargain.’
Lyra
tutted and stamped her foot, ‘Oh go
on then. Buy your stupid game.’
Rob
grinned at Kyle and handed him five pounds in change. Kyle reached across the
room and put the money in his desk drawer.
‘I’m
sorry I couldn’t be more helpful,’ Kyle said, sympathetically. ‘I tell you what
though, seeing as you came all this way to see me I’ll let you have another
game for half price.’
‘Sweet,’
Rob said, as he started flipping through the pirated games in Kyle’s case. ‘Two
pounds fifty, they’re like forty pounds in the shops.’
‘What
can I say,’ Kyle grinned, ‘I’m a nice guy.’
Rob
picked another game out of the rack and happily handed Kyle the money, but his
smile vanished when he saw the angry scowl on Lyra’s face.
(15) ILL GOTTEN GAINS
‘I’m sorry, Lyra,’ Rob said, as they reached the
bottom of the stairs and headed back towards the electric cart.
‘You
spent all our money on two stupid
Playstation games,’ Lyra growled. ‘You don’t care about my feelings at all, do
you?’
‘I’ll
let you drive the buggy back,’ Rob said.
Lyra
huffed as she got into the driving seat. ‘You know, when I buy the
Drenchmasters tomorrow, I’m not sure if I’m going to let you use them.’
‘Well
we’re not getting them anyway, so it doesn’t matter.’
Lyra
grinned mischievously. ‘Aren’t we?’ she said, as she peeled a twenty pound note
out of her tracksuit top.
‘Where
did you get that?’ Rob gasped.
‘When
you gave Kyle the five pounds I watched him put it in his desk drawer. I
noticed that he had about a hundred pounds in there. I sneaked in and pinched a
twenty while he was selling you the second disk.’
Rob’s
mouth dropped open. ‘You stole Kyle’s money,’ he gasped angrily.
‘Keep
your stupid voice down,’ Lyra said.
‘Are
you insane?’ Rob spluttered. ‘Kyle’s sixteen, if he finds out that you nicked his
money, he’ll kick our butts.’
Lyra
shrugged. ‘He had loads of money in there, he’ll never notice.’
Rob was
shaking his head. ‘What’s gotten in to you, Lyra? You’re usually more sensible
than me, but you’re acting like a total nutter.’
Lyra
grabbed Rob by the scruff of his hoodie and pulled him close. ‘I’m sick of the
way Zoe treats us,’ she snarled. ‘Tomorrow, we’re going to get her back, or die
trying.’
(16) THE SHOPPING MALL
Saturday is a free day for all the cherubs who live in
the junior block. They can hang around in their rooms and play, go swimming in
the campus leisure pool, play sport, or go on an outing in one of the CHERUB
mini busses.
There
are usually six choices of outing, which include ten-pin bowling, trips to the
cinema, caving and go-carting. But the most popular choice is always shopping, especially
amongst the girls.
Lyra
and Rob hadn’t got back to their beds until past ten o’clock and almost
overslept. They scooped down bowls of cereal as fast as they could and made it
to the mini-bus heading for the shopping centre seconds before Madeline closed
the sliding door.
‘Phew,’
Lyra gasped as they stepped along the cramped aisle inside the packed mini bus.
They
ended up sitting directly opposite Zoe and Gerda. The two girls had both put their
hair up. They wore high heels, short skirts and carried matching handbags.
‘Oooh
look at the ladies in their fancy clobber,’ Rob mocked.
Zoe
tutted. ‘We can’t all go around with greasy hair and dirt under our nails like
you and your tomboy girlfriend.’
‘Hey,’ Lyra
said angrily.
Lyra was a bit of a tomboy, but she had a
habit of thumping people who said it to her face.
‘Did
the little tomboy wash all the mud out of her hair?’ Gerda asked sarcastically,
as Madeline drove the mini-bus through the main gates of CHERUB campus.
Rob noticed
that the backs of Zoe’s hands were all red and sore. ‘How long did it take you
to scrub the hut?’
Zoe
shrugged, trying to make out that the punishment had been easy. ‘Not long,’ she
said.
‘You
weren’t back when we all went to bed at nine o’clock,’ Lyra said.
‘You
two are totally immature,’ Zoe spluttered, as she raised her palm. ‘So talk to
the hand, ‘cos the face ain’t listening.’
It took
half an hour to drive from CHERUB campus to Shopping World. It was one of the
biggest shopping centres in the country, with just about every shop you could think
of.
The
only trouble is that Shopping World is always packed on a Saturday. Madeline
yelled out instructions as she led twenty cherubs across the giant car park
towards the main entrance.
‘Under eights
must stay with me,’ she yelled. ‘Eight and nine year olds can go off on their
own, but one of you must have a mobile phone and you must stay in pairs at all times. We’ll meet back outside WH
Smith at one thirty sharp. Do NOT be late.’
(17) ITEM 261 272
Rob and Lyra raced along the shiny floored corridors
of Shopping World to the catalogue store.
‘They’d
better be in stock,’ Lyra grinned as she entered.
And they
were.
Five minutes later, they emerged through the automatic
doors, each holding a huge cardboard box with a brightly coloured Drenchmaster
5000 inside.
They
found a bench, tore open the packages and began removing the mass of twisters,
clips and wires that held the guns in place.
‘I wish
it was black,’ Rob said as he raised the brightly coloured gun up to eye level and
aimed it at passing shoppers. ‘That would make it so much cooler.’
‘Lets
fill ‘em up and try ‘em out,’ Lyra said.
Lyra
went into the ladies and Rob into the gents. Unfortunately, the sinks at Shopping
World had the kind of taps that you had to keep pressed down with one hand,
which made filling up the guns a pain.
After
several minutes, and several concerned looks from adults using the toilets, Rob
emerged with water splashed down his t-shirt and soggy tracksuit bottoms.
‘They’re
really heavy now they’re full,’ Lyra said.
Rob
spotted a chubby woman accompanied by some of the youngest cherubs approaching
the bathroom.
‘It’s Madeline,’
Rob gulped. ‘She’ll do her nut if she catches us with these.’
Unfortunately,
they were stuck in a corridor and their only escape route was through a fire
door. The pair charged through the door and outside into bright sunshine.
They were
in a courtyard at the back of the shopping centre, which was designed for giant
trucks to pull up and make deliveries to the shops. But there were no trucks or
grown ups around at this time on a Saturday and the flat concrete had been
taken over by hundreds of pigeons.
‘Lets
try this baby out,’ Rob grinned.
He grabbed
the handle on the side of the gun and pumped it frantically to build up the
pressure inside. A little gauge on the side of the gun showed when it was fully
charged.
‘I hope
this is good,’ Rob said, as he prepared to pull the trigger.
Lyra
knew what Rob meant: there were lots of toys in the world that looked amazing in
catalogues and on TV commercials, but were complete rubbish when you got them
home.
But the
Drenchmaster 5000 wasn’t one of them.
Rob broke into a huge grin as two streams of water roared
out the front of his gun. One pigeon took a direct hit and hundreds more fluttered
into the sky as the powerful jets sprayed the concrete.
‘Wow,’
Rob giggled, as Lyra frantically pumped her gun.
She
aimed the gun at Rob’s lap and gave him a tiny squirt.
‘Ha-ha,
you peed yourself.’
Rob
turned his gun to get Lyra back, but when he pulled the trigger all he got was
a little dribble out of the end.
‘Man,
it runs out fast,’ Rob said, then he
realised that Lyra was giving him one of her most evil grins. ‘Don’t soak my
clothes, Lyra,’ he grovelled. ‘We’re here to get Zoe and Gerda, remember?’
‘I’ll
tell you what,’ Lyra said. ‘I won’t squirt you if you tell me how lovely I am.’
Rob
tutted. ‘Lyra, you’re lovely.’
‘Hmmmmm,’
Lyra said thoughtfully. ‘You didn’t really sound like you meant that. Say it
again, with more feeling.’
‘Lyra,
you’re as ugly as a pig’s butt and you smell even worse,’ Rob sneered, before spinning
around and running away.
(18) THE GREAT FOOD COURT STAKE OUT
Lyra only squirted Rob a little bit when she caught
him. They went back inside and refilled their guns.
They
were too heavy to drag around all morning and Madeline would go bananas if she
caught them walking around Shopping World with loaded Drenchmasters, so Rob and
Lyra decided to hide out in the food court and wait for Zoe and her friends to
get lunch.
The
food court was huge, with McDonalds, Burger King, KFC and hundreds of round
tables. They found a table right at the back, stashed their guns beneath it and
waited.
The
only thing worse than waiting a long time for something is waiting a long time
for something that you’re excited about.
Rob and Lyra killed time by eating Happy Meals, trashing
the action figures that came with them and then making paper aeroplanes out of
the cardboard packaging.
When they ran out of cardboard, Rob found a newspaper
that someone had left behind and they made giant paper aeroplanes and started
throwing them about.
Eventually, a security guard came over and told them
to stop messing about because they were disturbing customers eating at the
other tables.
‘There she is,’ Rob grinned, when Zoe, Gerda and two
of their other friends finally
arrived.
The four girls joined the queue at Burger King. They
all wore boots and short skirts, and carried handbags.
‘They really think they’re something, don’t they?’ Rob
sneered, as he sprung out of his chair. ‘Lets go blast ‘em.’
But Lyra dragged him back.
‘They’ll just run off,’ Lyra said. ‘Wait until they’re
all sitting down. Then it will be much harder for them to get away.’
‘Good thinking,’ Rob nodded.
So they waited another few minutes as the four
chattering girls bought themselves burgers and sat a table on the opposite side
of the food hall.
‘They haven’t even seen us,’ Lyra grinned. ‘You creep
up behind that wooden partition and I’ll come in from the other side.’
‘OK,’ Rob said, trembling
with anxiety.
Rob grabbed his Drenchmaster and bent down low, so
that you could barely see him moving between the tables. He ended up crouching
beside the partition, less than a metre from the table where Zoe, Gerda and
their two friends were unwrapping their burgers.
‘I really want to go back to Claire’s Accessories,’
Zoe babbled as she took a delicate bite out of her cheeseburger. ‘I got the
blue beads, but I’d really like the pink ones…’
‘Oooh you’ve got to get them,’ one of the other girls
said. ‘They’ll really go well with that blue top you bought last week.’
‘And you should get that nail varnish with the glitter
in as well,’ Gerda added.
Rob heard a clanking noise, like someone tripping over
a chair leg.
‘Oh look, it’s Lyra the little tomboy,’ Zoe tutted. ‘What
are you creeping around for, bonehead?’
‘You’ll see,’ Lyra shouted, as she raised her
Drenchmaster.
Rob bobbed up from behind the partition just in time
to see the twin jets of water blasting Zoe and Gerda in the head.
Rob aimed at Zoe from the other side and hit her from
point blank range, then moved his aim down so that the water blasted all the
food on the table and sent trays and cups of Coke and Fanta skidding across the
tabletop and clattering into the four girls’ laps.
‘My best top,’ Zoe wailed, as her friends waved their
arms in the air and screamed like insane cats.
Zoe sprung angrily out of her seat, vaulted over the
partition and charged towards her brother.
Rob scrambled backwards, but Zoe knocked him down and
pinned him to the floor. Water dripped out of her long hair as she twisted the
gun from Rob’s grasp and held the nozzles right in front of his nose.
‘Prepare to die, freak,’ Zoe said.
Fortunately for Rob, the security guard wrapped a fat
arm around Zoe’s waist and plucked her off the floor at the exact second she
pulled the trigger.
Unfortunately, the guard was yelling, ‘How dare you
behave like this in my food court,’ at the top of his voice and the two streams
of liquid shot into his mouth.
Rob clambered off the floor, as the guard roared with
anger. He looked for Lyra and spotted her sprinting between tables with Gerda
and the other two girls chasing after her.
Rob decided to run away, but he gulped as he saw Madeline
and a train of little kids steaming towards him. He spun on his heels, only to
find another security guard closing in on him from that direction.
Rob was trapped. All he could do was watch the chaos for
a few more seconds before an angry adult grabbed hold of him.
Lyra tripped over a chair leg and got bundled by Zoe’s
three girlfriends, while Zoe wriggled free and floored the soggy security guard
with a well aimed Karate kick.
Rob stared at the food and drink all over the floor,
the watery streaks and puddles everywhere and the shocked expressions on the
faces of diners at the surrounding tables.
He felt light-headed and his stomach had shrivelled up
into a tight little ball.
Maybe this hadn’t been such a good idea after all.
(19) THE MOST TROUBLE, EVER!
Madeline was too angry to shout. She calmly ordered
all of the kids back to the mini-bus and drove to CHERUB campus with a furious
red face and her fingers gripping the steering wheel so tightly that Rob thought
it might crumble to dust.
When
they arrived, Madeline told Zoe, Rob, Lyra and Gerda to go upstairs and wait
outside Miss Green’s office.
Miss
Green was the Head Carer, which meant that she was in charge of all the cherubs
who lived in the junior block. You only got sent to Miss Green’s office if you
were in BIG trouble.
The
only other time Rob had been sent to Miss Green was when he kicked a football
through his bedroom window twice in one week.
Rob hadn’t
got wet, but Zoe, Lyra and Gerda were all dripping onto the vinyl floor outside
Miss Green’s office.
Miss
Green sat inside while Madeline explained what had happened at Shopping World.
The four kids couldn’t hear this explanation, but after ten minutes they heard
Miss Green stand up, pound on her desk and yell at the top of her voice.
‘This
is totally unacceptable.’
Rob,
Lyra, Zoe and Gerda all jumped to attention as Miss Green ripped open her
office door.
‘I
didn’t start it, Miss,’ Zoe blurted. ‘Rob and Lyra bought the water guns.’
‘Did I
ask you to speak?’ Miss Green shouted, with a roar that made Rob wonder if
flames were about to shoot out of her mouth.
Rob
felt like crying as he promised himself that he’d never go along with one of
Lyra’s crazy plans again.
‘This
is too serious for me to deal with,’ Miss Green said. ‘You’re all going to have
to come with me to Dr McAfferty’s office.’
Rob
gulped. He’d never been in enough trouble to get sent to Dr McAfferty’s office
before.
Dr McAfferty was the Chairman of CHERUB. He was in
charge of everything and he was the only person who could kick you out of
CHERUB and send you back to an ordinary children’s home.
‘Please,’
Lyra said, as she started to sob. ‘This is all my fault. Don’t take me to the
Chairman. I swear I’ll never do it again. I don’t want to get expelled.’
Gerda
burst into tears next and that was enough to set Rob off.
‘Not
the chairman,’ he sniffled. ‘Please Miss Green.’
Zoe liked
to think she was tougher than the others and refused to cry, but she started
turning very white and by the time they arrived at the Chairman’s office in the
main building, she looked so pale that the Chairman’s secretary asked if she
was going to be sick.
(20) AN UNUSUAL PUNISHMENT
Madeline and Miss Green went into the Chairman’s
office to explain what had happened. It only took a couple of minutes, but Rob
was so worried that his arms were shaking and the wait felt as if it went on
for a hundred million years.
Dr McAfferty was an elderly man who spoke with a
Scottish accent. He was usually very friendly. Every year he dressed up in a
Santa suit and handed out presents on Christmas morning. But after hearing what
had happened at Shopping World, he didn’t sound friendly at all.
‘Rob and Zoe King, come into my office now,’ Dr McAfferty yelled, from behind
his big oak desk.
‘Sit down,’ he added, as the two siblings shuffled
into the room.
‘I
didn’t…’ Zoe said.
‘Quiet,’
Dr McAfferty yelled. ‘Whatever it is, I don’t want to hear it. I want you both
to sit still and listen carefully.
‘Now, I get the feeling that despite being
brother and sister, you two dislike each other. Is that true?’
‘Yes,
sir,’ Rob and Zoe nodded.
‘I find
that very sad,’ Dr McAfferty said. ‘But some people don’t get along and that’s
just the way the world is. However,
while we don’t expect everyone here on CHERUB campus to like each other, we do
expect everyone to behave themselves. The battle that’s going on between you
two has lasted far too long and it must stop, right now.’
To make
his point clear, Dr McAfferty picked up a heavy book and thumped it against his
desk. Rob and Zoe both jumped, before the chairman continued his speech.
‘Miss
Green tells me that you’ve both been made to run punishment laps, you’ve written
letters of apology to each other, been confined to campus, been confined to your
rooms, been banned from various activities, but you still keep getting in
trouble. Can either of you give me a good reason why I shouldn’t boot you both
out of CHERUB?’
‘It was
Lyra’s plan,’ Zoe said. ‘She admitted it in front of Miss Green.’
‘Me and
Zoe could be put in different parts of the building,’ Rob suggested. ‘If we
don’t come near each other, there won’t be any more trouble.’
‘No,’
Dr McAfferty said firmly. ‘You two must
learn to get along with each other. If there is one more row, fight, or any
other kind of incident between you two, I’m going to kick both of you out of
CHERUB. Is that understood?’
‘Yes,
sir,’ Zoe and Rob said.
‘But
I’m not going to make it easy for you,’ Dr McAfferty added. ‘You’re going to
have to prove to me that you’re worthy of your places at CHERUB.
‘As you know, most of the rooms in the
junior block are designed for two kids. But on the fifth floor, there’s a small
room that’s only big enough for one bed. It hasn’t been used for a few years
and it’s pretty dingy. But I’m going to have a set of bunk beds put in that
room and you two will be sharing it for
the next six months.’
‘But…’
Zoe gasped.’
‘Sir,
no,’ Rob gasped. ‘Anything but that.’
Dr
McAfferty smiled. ‘If you don’t accept my offer, you can pack up your bags, say
goodbye to all of your friends and we’ll find you somewhere else to live.’
Rob and
Zoe glowered at each other.
‘Well,
I suppose,’ Zoe said.
‘I
don’t want to get kicked out,’ Rob shrugged, ‘So I guess I haven’t got any
choice.’
‘I
guess you haven’t,’ Dr McAfferty smiled. ‘And remember, if there’s so much as a
squeak, a scream, or an object being thrown inside that room, you can both pack
up your belongings and say goodbye to CHERUB.’
‘What
about Lyra?’ Zoe asked bitterly.
‘Lyra
will be punished,’ Dr McAfferty said. ‘But that’s my business, not yours. Now
go back to your rooms and start getting your things ready to move up to the
fifth floor.’
(21) THE DINING ROOM
Madeline told Rob and Zoe to get lunch in the dining
room before doing anything else.
Rob was
so miserable that even finding his favourite fish burger and curly fries on the
menu didn’t cheer him up. Zoe stood behind him in the queue, but they didn’t speak
to each other and found tables on opposite sides of the room.
Lyra
had been kept back to receive her punishment from Dr McAfferty and by the time
she joined Rob, he was licking ketchup smears off his empty plate.
‘You
should count yourself lucky that you’ve only got to move in with donkey breath,’
Lyra said. ‘Because it was my idea to buy the Drenchmasters, I’ve got to run
ten punishment laps every day for the next month, I’ve got to scrub dishes in
the kitchen every night and all my
pocket money for the next month is going to pay towards cleaning up the mess at
Shopping World.’
‘I’d
rather do all of that than spend one
night sharing a room with Zoe,’ Rob said. ‘Besides, I’ve had my pocket money
taken away too.’
‘Pah,’
Lyra said. ‘You got off light.’
‘I was
thinking,’ Rob said. ‘Would you mind looking after McFlurry for me? I don’t
want him in my new room. There’s no window and Zoe will probably try to poison
him.’
Lyra
thought for a second before nodding. ‘I don’t mind feeding him and doing his
water bottle, but you’ll still have to clean out his cage whenever it stinks of
wee.’
‘Deal,’
Rob nodded as he felt a large hand sliding around the back of his neck.
Lyra
felt a hand sliding around her neck too.
‘Fancy
bumping into you two again,’ Kyle said.
Rob and
Lyra both gulped.
‘Hey,
Kyle,’ Lyra said, trying to sound innocent. ‘Is something the matter?’
‘Yes
there is,’ Kyle said. ‘Before I left my room last night, I looked in my drawer
and found that some money had gone missing.’
‘How
strange,’ Lyra said.
‘It
wasn’t us,’ Rob added. ‘There was a big party going on outside, maybe someone
snuck into your room and took it.’
Kyle
slowly shook his head, ‘I locked my room when I went out. The only ones who
came into my room were you two.’
Lyra
frantically shook her head. ‘We didn’t take your twenty quid, Kyle. I swear.’
Rob
smacked his hand against his forehead as Kyle grinned triumphantly.
‘How
did you know it was twenty quid then?’
‘You
just told us,’ Lyra said.
‘I told
you some of my money went missing, but I didn’t say how much.’
‘Oh…’ Lyra gasped.
‘Luckily for you, I’m not a snitch and I’m not the
sort of person who goes around thumping eight year olds,’ Kyle said. ‘But I do want
my money back.’
‘The
thing is…’ Lyra stuttered.
‘There’s
a bit of a problem,’ Rob explained. ‘We spent it.’
‘On
what?’
‘A pair
of Drenchmaster 5000s,’ Lyra said.
Kyle
thought for a second, before breaking into a grin. ‘Drenchmasters are a good
laugh,’ he said. ‘Give them to me, plus the two Playstation games I sold you
and we’ll call it even.’
Lyra
shook her head. ‘You can have the games, but Miss Green confiscated the Drenchmasters
after we used them at Shopping World.’
‘Well,
whatever,’ Kyle said. ‘You two still owe me twenty quid. Now, I know you little
kids get six pounds a week each. So in two weeks, you’ll have enough to pay me
back and –‘
‘No we
don’t,’ Rob interrupted, ‘We’ve both just had our pocket money confiscated for
three months.’
The boy
called James who’d been outside Kyle’s room the night before came up to Kyle
and slapped him on the back.
‘Hey,
Kyle,’ James said, ‘why are you hassling eight year olds?’
Kyle
turned sharply and glowered at James. ‘They might look small and innocent, but these two nicked twenty quid off me
last night.’
‘Good
for them,’ James grinned. ‘You’re always conning people with that dodgy gear
you sell.’
‘James,
can’t you butt out?’ Kyle asked. ‘I’m trying to do business here.’
‘Leave
them alone, Kyle,’ James said firmly. ‘They’re only little and it’s not as if you’re
short of a few quid.’
Kyle swept
his hand through his hair and thought for a few moments.
‘OK,’ he said finally. ‘You two can forget about my money,
but I’m warning you both, stay away from my room or there’ll be trouble.’
Rob and
Lyra smiled at James as Kyle walked away.
‘Cheers,
James,’ Rob said.
‘You
saved our butts,’ Lyra added.
James
put out his hand and Rob and Lyra gave him a high five.
‘I
heard what you two did at Shopping World today,’ James grinned. ‘Everyone’s
talking about it. It sounds hilarious.’
‘You
reckon?’ Lyra said miserably. ‘I bet you wouldn’t say that if you’d seen our
list of punishments.’
(22) AND NOW, THE END IS NEAR
Rob stumbled into his new bedroom holding two giant
boxes of clothes and toys and threw them on to the bottom bunk.
The
room was horrible. It smelled like rotten fruit, the wallpaper was peeling off
and there wasn’t even a window. Zoe sat on the top bunk with her legs swinging
over the edge.
‘There’s
not enough room for all your junk in here,’ she said acidly.
Rob
looked around and saw that Zoe had already brought in more than twenty boxes of
stuff.
‘There’s
no room because you’ve got so much junk here already,’ Rob said angrily. ‘And I
want the top bunk. I can’t stand sleeping with someone else making the springs
squeak on top of me.’
Zoe
smiled, ‘Well I got here first and I’m bigger than you, so tough titty.’
Rob
slumped miserably on to the bottom bunk, which looked like being his for the
next six months. Then he had an anxious thought about his glass picture frame.
He’d deliberately left it on top when he packed so that it didn’t get squashed
and break, but everything had tumbled out of the boxes when he’d dropped them on
to the bed.
Rob
snatched the frame from beneath his spare boots and was relieved to see that the
glass hadn’t broken.
The picture inside was the one that had been taken of
his family just a few hours before his mum, dad and older brother Louis died in
the helicopter accident.
Rob
reached towards the only shelf in the room and saw that Zoe had already put a
ghastly pink and yellow frame with daisies on it up there. But as Rob closed
in, he saw that Zoe’s frame had exactly the same picture inside it.
‘Hey,’
Zoe said as she jumped down off the top bunk.
Rob was
expecting to get thumped, but he was surprised to see Zoe smiling at him.
‘I
didn’t realise that you had that picture too,’ Zoe said.
‘Of
course,’ Rob nodded, ‘I love it. Mum and Dad’s heads look a bit funny on your
one.’
Zoe flushed
red with embarrassment. ‘When I was little, I used to kiss their faces
goodnight.’
‘Ahh,’
Rob grinned. ‘Do you ever wonder what they’d be like now, if they were still
alive?’
Zoe nodded.
‘Our Mum would probably have some grey hair, Dad might have gone bald.’
‘Or
gotten fat,’ Rob grinned.
‘Louis
would be eighteen,’ Zoe said. ‘He’d probably be at university, with a
girlfriend.’
‘Yeah,’
Rob said. ‘He might even have had a job, and bought us presents.’
‘I can’t
hardly remember,’ Zoe said. ‘But I still think about Mum and Dad every day.’
‘And me,’
Rob nodded, as he felt a tear welling up in his eye. He looked around and saw
that Zoe was upset too.
‘You
know what?’ Zoe asked, as she pulled a coin out of her pocket. ‘I don’t reckon Mum
and Dad would want us to fight all the time. I’ll toss you for the top bunk.
Heads or tails?’
‘Heads,’
Rob said.
Zoe flipped
the coin and tried to catch it, but it slipped between her fingers and rolled
across the grubby floorboards.
‘Looks
like heads,’ Zoe said. ‘You get the top bunk.’
‘Nah,
you keep it,’ Rob said. ‘You’ve already got your duvet and pillows up there.’
‘Well,
if you’re sure,’ Zoe said.
As Zoe climbed back on to the top bunk, Rob sat down
on his new bed and smiled, because he’d just had the first normal conversation
with his sister since…
Rob thought very hard and realised that it was the
first normal conversation he’d ever
had with his sister.
‘Here,
Zoe,’ Rob shouted. ‘Are we friends now?’
‘We’ve got to live together in this room for
the next six months, so it’s probably best if we try not to kill each other,’
Zoe said.
‘I reckon that’s what Mum and Dad would have wanted.’
Rob saw
Zoe lean over the side of her mattress and reach down with her beefy arm.
‘Shake?’
she asked.
‘Sure,’
Rob said.
Then he reached up and grasped his sister’s hand.
CHERUB Jr – Spies in Training copyright Robert
Muchamore 2006. CHERUB logo, copyright Robert Muchamore & Hachette Children’s
Books. This story is intended for free distribution only via the website
www.cherubcampus.com and may not be hosted or distributed by any other means
without permission.